Tidal energy, conservation, and fisheries in Strangford Lough, N Ireland Dr. Julia Sigwart j.sigwart@qub.ac.uk Marine research stations • Extraordinary places are often a bit remote! • Local specialist infrastructure is necessary to exploit opportunities • Marine infrastructures and specialist institutes foster interdisciplinary collaboration and engagement with stakeholders • UK -> NI -> Strangford Lough Strangford Lough An inland sea surrounded by acronyms • one of the most protected marine sites in Europe – Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) – Marine Conservation Zone (formerly Marine Nature Reserve) – Natura 2000 – Ramsar site – National Trust properties – Area of Special Scientific Interest (ASSI) – Special Area of Conservation (SAC) – Special Protection Areas (SPA) – OSPAR Marine protected area All of these, and more Strangford Lough • • • • • • • • Fully marine, inland sea, biggest in UK 150 km2 (100 km2 at low tide) Tidal currents up to 4 m/s Experimental tidal energy generators High currents to protected mudflats Genetic isolation Migratory birds Reefs, including Modiolous Queen’s Marine Lab • Research institute based at the “Narrows”, lough entrance • Year-round facilities for Biology and Engineering • Resident (15) and non-resident (60) • Coastal boats & University SCUBA team • Teaching lab – field courses QML marine science • sustainable marine resources - seaweed, shellfish, and energy generation • organismal biology - anatomy and histology - experimental ecology, mesocosms • global science & local conservation Living Laboratory • 65 m depth • narrow tidal connection to Irish Sea • tidal transportation of sediments creates a gradient of bottom conditions (and habitats) • Mud and gravel reef building Modiolus horse mussels • Deep channel rapids tidal energy Modiolus modiolus reefs • EU protected Annex I habitat • Disappeared from most of historical distribution in Strangford Lough; remnant populations are highly fragmented. • NI government threatened with infraction – fines • QUB research for effective restoration funded by NI Government (2008-2015) - mesocosm experiments - tidal current modelling - artificial reefs & local monitoring 1975 records basis of SAC designation 2009 Modiolus protected area 2012 km • New enforcement (DOE NI) and public awareness • No anchoring, no SCUBA diving, no fishing, nothing touches the bottom below 10 m • Continued decline (and continued research...) • Mud and gravel reef building Modiolus horse mussels • Deep channel rapids tidal energy Interdisciplinary QML • Research spanning 3 Schools (Biology, Geography, Civil Engineering) – Conservation – Seaweed biofuels – Coastal defenses and marine renewable energy • Engineering @ QML – 10th scale wave & prototype tidal seabed sites – Open water towing facility – Large scale Wave basin – Analytical labs, CT rooms • World’s first commercial scale tidal turbine (2008) • QML research leaders (biology & engineering) as science liaison for policy makers – commercial installation in an SAC • Project completed • Next project: decommissioning and de-installation, 2015 Siemens SeaGen Northern Ireland’s marine research institute • Extraordinary places are often a bit remote! • Local specialist infrastructure is necessary to exploit opportunities • Interdisciplinary projects expand audience, and relevance • Combining applied and blue skies research makes stronger science Dr. Julia Sigwart j.sigwart@qub.ac.uk
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